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OPINION

Stalled Not Dead

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
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Many are asking what happened to the Trump Rally that set all-time records for the first couple of months after the election. Now, the first 100 days see the Trump Rally struggling to stay in the top ten.

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I don’t think the Trump Rally is over. However, the White House and Republicans are being sent a message about scoring more legislative victories. The business needle has already begun to move, and 2017 has a chance to be a huge year for the economy and for investors.

After the close on Wednesday, earnings release winners include Dow components; American Express (AXP), Qualcomm (QCOM), Select Comfort Corp (SCSS), and CSX Corp (CSX) might be the biggest news of them all. United Rentals (URI) missed and that might reflect the stalled Trump Agenda, although this has always been a buy on dips (doing the work now).

President100th day in officeS&P 500 index % change
Franklin D. Roosevelt (D)June 12, 193386.47%
Franklin D. RooseveltApril 30, 194510.42%
John F. Kennedy (D)April 30, 19618.92%
Barack Obama (D)April 30, 20098.39%
George H.W. Bush (R)April 30, 19898.03%
Barack ObamaMay 1, 20136.51%
Dwight D. Eisenhower (R)May 1, 19573.65%
Donald J. TrumpApril 30, 2017 

There was curious action in the market as the Dow Jones Industrial Average could never offset the weight of free-falling shares of IBM; investors flocked into new technology, including computer chip makers. The oddity of the session, however, was money seeking shelter in brick-and-mortar names while dumping the widows and orphans into the safe haven of utilities.

I understand bottom-fishing and that’s probably all the action was, but we should mention it’s a mistake to conflate the idea of the consumer being dead with the death of malls. On that note, the S&P Consumer Discretionary eked out a gain, led by AutoNation (AN), and CarMax (KMX), and followed by a Lithia Motors (LAD) posted strong earnings beat.

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Perhaps the demise of the auto rally is overhyped.

Still, why did Best Buy (BBY) and Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY) do so well?  As a student of the market and of economics, I’m a fan of the good that comes out of creative destruction, a hallmark of capitalism that has often has been used as a critique. I even believe something will evolve from malls that lives side by side with the Internet age.

Yes, hundreds of retail stores are shutting down but the overall demise is also overhyped.

This brings me to the biggest news of yesterday’s session; the $3.3 billion acquisition of Chewy.com by Pet Smart (PTEM) is the largest brick-and-mortar takeover of an online business, surpassing the Walmart acquisition of Jet.com. This is a brilliant move, and I think this will be the template for other brick-and- mortar names.

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